Figures are trickling in as hunting seasons wind down in Montana, Idaho and Wyoming, where wolves were hunted to extinction in the last century but, in the wake of a controversial reintroduction program, are now ensconced in all three states and busting out toward Washington, Oregon and California.

State wildlife officials, fearing the recovery has been too robust, have been encouraging hunters and trappers to shave the numbers back, and the latest figures show that effort has worked, with 225 wolves killed in Montana, 69 in Wyoming and 259 in Idaho.

“Is that a healthy number? No, that’s persecution at an incredible level,” said Marc Cooke, spokesman for an advocacy group, Wolves of the Rockies, in Stevensville, Mont.

But state wildlife officials say they are maintaining healthy wolf populations in all three states and cannot ask citizens to put up with more.

“We need to achieve a reduction. Montana has made room for wolves, we are long past the period of recovering wolves, and we are committed to managing for a recovered population,” said Jeff Hagener, director of the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife & Parks. “The best news is that hunters and trappers, the core of Montana’s wildlife conservation program, are helping us manage Montana’s most recently recovered native species.”

Montana’s wolf “harvest” was up 36 percent this year, including four radio-collared wolves from Yellowstone National Park shot by hunters. The deaths of the four prompted a national outcry. Gov. Steve Bullock last month signed into law legislation that will open the door to even more hunting, lowering license fees for nonresidents, reducing the five-day wait for hunters obtaining new licenses, and allowing the use of electronic calls to lure the animals.

Idaho’s hunt was down slightly compared with the 379 wolves killed last season, but hunting remains open in two areas of the state through June.

“The numbers are down a little bit, but I don’t think that’s too much of a surprise,” said Mike Keckler, spokesman for the Idaho Department of Fish and Game. “Wolves, they get wise fast, and I think they realized that being around humans was probably not a good idea, so they became a little more difficult.”

“As I heard one of our biologists say,” he added, “the smarter ones survive, the more naive ones tend not to.”

Wyoming got a late start on managing a hunt because federal protections for wolves in that state were the last to be lifted, in September. Its program calls for a controlled “trophy hunt” of up to 52 wolves in the northwestern part of the state, near Yellowstone and Grand Teton national parks. So far, 43 wolves have been killed.

Except for a limited “flex area” along the western border, where another controlled trophy hunt is allowed, the rest of Wyoming is open all year for wolf hunting; a total of 26 wolves have been killed so far in those uncontrolled areas.

A coalition of conservation groups has filed suit in federal court challenging Wyoming’s relatively lax hunting restrictions, seeking to have wolves returned to federal Endangered Species Act protections.

“This allows wolves in 85 percent of the state to be shot on sight as predators,” said Michael Garrity, executive director of Alliance for the Wild Rockies, a plaintiff in the suit.

Overall, he said, the number of wolves being shot and trapped across all three states threatens the ability to maintain a viable, connected population — a goal that many biologists believe would require 2,000 to 5,000 wolves spread across about 500 packs.

At its last official count in December 2011, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said the Northern Rockies were home to at least 1,774 wolves in about 287 packs, up 3 percent from the previous year. New puppies in the spring added to those numbers before this season’s hunts began.

Cooke, of Wolves of the Rockies, said the actual numbers of wolves killed is even higher, when animals killed by ranchers, disease, car collisions, trains and fights with other animals are factored in.

“When you do the math, we’re coming out with more than 350 wolves killed this year, just in Montana,” he said. “I think we’re on the road to relisting wolves in the Rocky Mountains.”

U.S. Wildlife Services spokeswoman Carol Bannerman said the agency killed 216 wolves in all three states that had come into repeated conflict with people or livestock during 2012. Idaho officials said state game officials there removed 16 more, while 21 wolves died because of other reasons.

Lynne Stone of the group Defenders of Wildlife in Idaho said that the number of livestock attacks in that state is up significantly — an ironic consequence, she said, of the heavy hunting numbers over the last two years.

“The hunting has put such intense pressure on the packs, they’re dispersing, they’re disrupted, the packs have been broken apart. There’s a lot of younger, less experienced animals out there, and you’re not allowing the wolves to maintain a healthy equilibrium with their habitat,” Stone said.

-->

SEATTLE — Wildlife managers are calling it an ecological success story. Conservation advocates say it threatens to undermine years of work to recover a once-endangered species.

The debate: A total of 553 wolves that have been killed by hunters and trappers in the Northern Rockies this season, the second since hunting of the furtive predators was made legal.

Figures are trickling in as hunting seasons wind down in Montana, Idaho and Wyoming, where wolves were hunted to extinction in the last century but, in the wake of a controversial reintroduction program, are now ensconced in all three states and busting out toward Washington, Oregon and California.

State wildlife officials, fearing the recovery has been too robust, have been encouraging hunters and trappers to shave the numbers back, and the latest figures show that effort has worked, with 225 wolves killed in Montana, 69 in Wyoming and 259 in Idaho.

“Is that a healthy number? No, that’s persecution at an incredible level,” said Marc Cooke, spokesman for an advocacy group, Wolves of the Rockies, in Stevensville, Mont.

But state wildlife officials say they are maintaining healthy wolf populations in all three states and cannot ask citizens to put up with more.

“We need to achieve a reduction. Montana has made room for wolves, we are long past the period of recovering wolves, and we are committed to managing for a recovered population,” said Jeff Hagener, director of the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife & Parks. “The best news is that hunters and trappers, the core of Montana’s wildlife conservation program, are helping us manage Montana’s most recently recovered native species.”

Montana’s wolf “harvest” was up 36 percent this year, including four radio-collared wolves from Yellowstone National Park shot by hunters. The deaths of the four prompted a national outcry. Gov. Steve Bullock last month signed into law legislation that will open the door to even more hunting, lowering license fees for nonresidents, reducing the five-day wait for hunters obtaining new licenses, and allowing the use of electronic calls to lure the animals.

Idaho’s hunt was down slightly compared with the 379 wolves killed last season, but hunting remains open in two areas of the state through June.

“The numbers are down a little bit, but I don’t think that’s too much of a surprise,” said Mike Keckler, spokesman for the Idaho Department of Fish and Game. “Wolves, they get wise fast, and I think they realized that being around humans was probably not a good idea, so they became a little more difficult.”

“As I heard one of our biologists say,” he added, “the smarter ones survive, the more naive ones tend not to.”

Wyoming got a late start on managing a hunt because federal protections for wolves in that state were the last to be lifted, in September. Its program calls for a controlled “trophy hunt” of up to 52 wolves in the northwestern part of the state, near Yellowstone and Grand Teton national parks. So far, 43 wolves have been killed.

Except for a limited “flex area” along the western border, where another controlled trophy hunt is allowed, the rest of Wyoming is open all year for wolf hunting; a total of 26 wolves have been killed so far in those uncontrolled areas.

A coalition of conservation groups has filed suit in federal court challenging Wyoming’s relatively lax hunting restrictions, seeking to have wolves returned to federal Endangered Species Act protections.

“This allows wolves in 85 percent of the state to be shot on sight as predators,” said Michael Garrity, executive director of Alliance for the Wild Rockies, a plaintiff in the suit.

Overall, he said, the number of wolves being shot and trapped across all three states threatens the ability to maintain a viable, connected population — a goal that many biologists believe would require 2,000 to 5,000 wolves spread across about 500 packs.

At its last official count in December 2011, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said the Northern Rockies were home to at least 1,774 wolves in about 287 packs, up 3 percent from the previous year. New puppies in the spring added to those numbers before this season’s hunts began.

Cooke, of Wolves of the Rockies, said the actual numbers of wolves killed is even higher, when animals killed by ranchers, disease, car collisions, trains and fights with other animals are factored in.

“When you do the math, we’re coming out with more than 350 wolves killed this year, just in Montana,” he said. “I think we’re on the road to relisting wolves in the Rocky Mountains.”

U.S. Wildlife Services spokeswoman Carol Bannerman said the agency killed 216 wolves in all three states that had come into repeated conflict with people or livestock during 2012. Idaho officials said state game officials there removed 16 more, while 21 wolves died because of other reasons.

Lynne Stone of the group Defenders of Wildlife in Idaho said that the number of livestock attacks in that state is up significantly — an ironic consequence, she said, of the heavy hunting numbers over the last two years.

“The hunting has put such intense pressure on the packs, they’re dispersing, they’re disrupted, the packs have been broken apart. There’s a lot of younger, less experienced animals out there, and you’re not allowing the wolves to maintain a healthy equilibrium with their habitat,” Stone said.

-->

SEATTLE — Wildlife managers are calling it an ecological success story. Conservation advocates say it threatens to undermine years of work to recover a once-endangered species.

The debate: A total of 553 wolves that have been killed by hunters and trappers in the Northern Rockies this season, the second since hunting of the furtive predators was made legal.

Figures are trickling in as hunting seasons wind down in Montana, Idaho and Wyoming, where wolves were hunted to extinction in the last century but, in the wake of a controversial reintroduction program, are now ensconced in all three states and busting out toward Washington, Oregon and California.

State wildlife officials, fearing the recovery has been too robust, have been encouraging hunters and trappers to shave the numbers back, and the latest figures show that effort has worked, with 225 wolves killed in Montana, 69 in Wyoming and 259 in Idaho.

“Is that a healthy number? No, that’s persecution at an incredible level,” said Marc Cooke, spokesman for an advocacy group, Wolves of the Rockies, in Stevensville, Mont.

But state wildlife officials say they are maintaining healthy wolf populations in all three states and cannot ask citizens to put up with more.

“We need to achieve a reduction. Montana has made room for wolves, we are long past the period of recovering wolves, and we are committed to managing for a recovered population,” said Jeff Hagener, director of the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife & Parks. “The best news is that hunters and trappers, the core of Montana’s wildlife conservation program, are helping us manage Montana’s most recently recovered native species.”

Montana’s wolf “harvest” was up 36 percent this year, including four radio-collared wolves from Yellowstone National Park shot by hunters. The deaths of the four prompted a national outcry. Gov. Steve Bullock last month signed into law legislation that will open the door to even more hunting, lowering license fees for nonresidents, reducing the five-day wait for hunters obtaining new licenses, and allowing the use of electronic calls to lure the animals.

Idaho’s hunt was down slightly compared with the 379 wolves killed last season, but hunting remains open in two areas of the state through June.

“The numbers are down a little bit, but I don’t think that’s too much of a surprise,” said Mike Keckler, spokesman for the Idaho Department of Fish and Game. “Wolves, they get wise fast, and I think they realized that being around humans was probably not a good idea, so they became a little more difficult.”

“As I heard one of our biologists say,” he added, “the smarter ones survive, the more naive ones tend not to.”

Wyoming got a late start on managing a hunt because federal protections for wolves in that state were the last to be lifted, in September. Its program calls for a controlled “trophy hunt” of up to 52 wolves in the northwestern part of the state, near Yellowstone and Grand Teton national parks. So far, 43 wolves have been killed.

Except for a limited “flex area” along the western border, where another controlled trophy hunt is allowed, the rest of Wyoming is open all year for wolf hunting; a total of 26 wolves have been killed so far in those uncontrolled areas.

A coalition of conservation groups has filed suit in federal court challenging Wyoming’s relatively lax hunting restrictions, seeking to have wolves returned to federal Endangered Species Act protections.

“This allows wolves in 85 percent of the state to be shot on sight as predators,” said Michael Garrity, executive director of Alliance for the Wild Rockies, a plaintiff in the suit.

Overall, he said, the number of wolves being shot and trapped across all three states threatens the ability to maintain a viable, connected population — a goal that many biologists believe would require 2,000 to 5,000 wolves spread across about 500 packs.

At its last official count in December 2011, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said the Northern Rockies were home to at least 1,774 wolves in about 287 packs, up 3 percent from the previous year. New puppies in the spring added to those numbers before this season’s hunts began.

Cooke, of Wolves of the Rockies, said the actual numbers of wolves killed is even higher, when animals killed by ranchers, disease, car collisions, trains and fights with other animals are factored in.

“When you do the math, we’re coming out with more than 350 wolves killed this year, just in Montana,” he said. “I think we’re on the road to relisting wolves in the Rocky Mountains.”

U.S. Wildlife Services spokeswoman Carol Bannerman said the agency killed 216 wolves in all three states that had come into repeated conflict with people or livestock during 2012. Idaho officials said state game officials there removed 16 more, while 21 wolves died because of other reasons.

Lynne Stone of the group Defenders of Wildlife in Idaho said that the number of livestock attacks in that state is up significantly — an ironic consequence, she said, of the heavy hunting numbers over the last two years.

“The hunting has put such intense pressure on the packs, they’re dispersing, they’re disrupted, the packs have been broken apart. There’s a lot of younger, less experienced animals out there, and you’re not allowing the wolves to maintain a healthy equilibrium with their habitat,” Stone said.

Connect with The Bulletin

Popular stories for News

Easter is just around the corner, which means that local venues and organizations are gathering, scattering and hiding colorful eggs for their yearly hunts. All you need to do is round up the kids and swing by one of the following locations for some egg-collecting fun. The following hunts, submitted to The Bulletin, are free unless otherwise noted. SATURDAYEASTER EGG HUNT: Children ages 12 and…
... more

SAN JOSE, Calif. — The precious stone weighs 840 pounds, or 180,000 carats, if you were thinking of polishing it up and putting it on your finger. It has been appraised for as much as $925 million, and sold for as little as $60,000. But how do you put a price on misery? Which, as we know, loves company — and there has been plenty…
... more

The holiest plant of the Christmas season may be a raggedy shrub with peeling bark that seems to grow best in a dusty backyard in Tempe, Ariz. This is Boswellia sacra, better known as the frankincense tree. The shrub’s gum resin is one of the three biblical gifts that the wise men bestowed on the infant Jesus. Until recently, Americans who wished to cultivate their…
... more

The reality: That is not true, said Dr. Richard Koller, a Bend neurologist. A sneeze does increase the pressure inside the skull a little bit, he said. People have worried that sneezes may kill brain cells because other things that increase pressure on the brain, such as some types of stroke, can lead to brain cell death or even the death of the person. However,…
... more

Visiting Steelhead Falls requires a certain doggedness. The lovely stretch of the Deschutes River isn't listed in William Sullivan's books chronicling myriad hiking trails in Oregon. The U. S. Bureau of Land Management owns the parcel but doesn't say much about it on its website. Getting to Steelhead Falls requires navigating the maze that is Crooked River Ranch. Our outdated directions left us searching for…
... more